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Economic
chaos
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-36
Monday September 4th
2006- Sunday September 10th 2006
THE government
media continued to obscure the root causes of the country’s economic
distress in the 91 stories they carried on the subject (ZBH [51]
and government papers [40]). Instead of relating the decline to
government’s economic policies, they restricted themselves to blaming
those outside government for the confusion.
This was illustrated
by the 20 stories that ZBH (12) and government papers (eight) carried
on the standoff between government and school authorities over increases
in school fees. They narrowly portrayed the increases – which government
insisted should be pegged on levels of last year’s third term as
compared to this year’s second term figures – as unjustifiable profiteering.
For example,
ZTV (4/9,8pm), Radio Zimbabwe (5/9,6am) and The Herald (9 &
10/9) and Chronicle (6/9) passively reported Education Permanent
Secretary Stephen Mahere threatening action against those schools
increasing fees without fully examining the reasons for the hikes.
The government
dailies quoted Mahere saying those defying the order risked "being
prosecuted in terms of the provisions of the Education and Anti-Corruption
Acts". There was no explanation how exactly the
Anti-Corruption Act applied. However, in a rare departure from its
unbridled pro-government slant, The Herald (6/9) criticised the
ministry’s school fees regime, saying the ministry had misplaced
its priorities by "spending many man-hours"
trying to "limit" the "right
of a parent who can afford the fees to choose"
a school they want their children to attend. Still, it avoided viewing
the fee chaos, which has characterised the beginning of every school
term in recent years, as indicative of the declining economy.
Similarly, the
official media’s 44 stories (ZBH [31] and government papers [13])
on the continued confusion surrounding the fuel sector were detached
from government policy.
Instead, almost
all the reports simply blamed fuel dealers and banks for the confusion
while simultaneously projecting government as having taken measures
to address problems bedevilling the sector. Except for The Sunday
Mail (10/9), which quoted the Motor Trade Association calling on
its members to "adhere to the petroleum product
prices Government and private oil companies recently agreed on",
the rest of the stories did not seek comment from the banks and
fuel dealers.
It was against
this background that none of the stories adequately reported the
impact of government’s decision to control fuel prices on the availability
of the commodity. For example, the Chronicle (7/9) unquestioningly
reported that "cheaper fuel from the National Oil
Company of Zimbabwe is now available" following
the disbursement of 10,000 litres per each province without seeking
to discover whether this was adequate.
Instead, The
Herald (4/9) commended government for "introducing cheap
fuel that is being consistently supplied to service stations"
saying it showed it "has the plight of the people at heart".
The papers’
buoyant mood seemed to contradict threats by Reserve Bank governor
Gideon Gono against banks that were allegedly giving fuel dealers
foreign currency at the unofficial rate, saying this had resulted
in the dealers failing to provide fuel at gazetted prices (The Herald
5/9 and ZTV 5/9,8pm).
Moreover, ZBH
failed to reconcile government’s directive to fuel dealers to sell
the commodity at the gazetted prices with bus operators’ contention
that the availability of ‘cheap’ fuel was erratic, forcing them
to source it from the parallel market.
The official
media’s reluctance to openly discuss government’s culpability in
the country’s economic mess also manifested itself in 35 stories
they carried on other indicators of economic collapse such as commodity
shortages and galloping price hikes. Typically, the reports merely
highlighted the indicators in isolation of government policies.
It was in this context that The Herald (7/9) buried in its business
section the announcement in the rise of cost of living for a family
of six from about $76 000 in July to $96 000 in August. ZTV (7/9,
7am) did not even report the matter; it merely carried news of this
massive increase in its news bar.
Although the
government media’s sourcing pattern appeared diverse as shown in
Fig 1, their reports remained uncritical.
Fig
1 Voice distribution on ZBH
| Govt |
Ordinary
people |
ZANU
PF |
Business |
Alternative |
Professional |
| 22 |
64 |
7 |
33 |
13 |
2 |
Notably, most
of the voices ZBH quoted expressed their concern about the deteriorating
economic conditions or, as in the case of ordinary people, generally
blaming them on businesses.
Fig 2 Voice
distribution in the government Press
| Govt
|
Professional |
Zanu
PF |
Ordinary
people |
MDC |
Unnamed |
Alternative |
Police |
| 19 |
13 |
4 |
9 |
3 |
4 |
4 |
3 |
The private media
were forthright in their analysis of the economy’s precarious state
in the 28 stories they carried on the subject.
Private papers
published 20 reports while the private media carried eight.
They noted that
contrary to claims by the official media that government’s economic
strategies were paying dividends, the country’s economic future
remained bleak. Besides, they carried several stories on indicators
of economic decline, which they viewed as symptomatic of government’s
failed policies. The Zimbabwe Independent (8/9), for example, pointed
out that while the central bank had paraded its monetary reforms
as "heralding the dawn of a new era",
inflationary pressures remained "relentlessly entrenched
in the country’s beleaguered economy." It quoted
analysts projecting that although inflation had dropped to below
1,000 % it would soon return to previous record highs because of
spiralling commodity prices.
Earlier, Studio
7 (6/9), The Financial Gazette and The Daily Mirror (7/9) revealed
that bakers were planning to increase the price of bread from $200
to $385 due to rising input costs and erratic supply of wheat by
the GMB.
The private Press’
critical approach was mirrored by its attempts to balance official
comment with independent views.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
| Govt
|
Alternative
|
Unnamed |
Ordinary
People |
Lawyer |
| 12 |
9 |
7 |
3 |
5 |
Fig 4 Voice
distribution in the private electronic media
| Government |
Alternative |
| 3 |
3 |
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